People observing a minute’s silence in St Ann’s Square, Manchester, England, in honour of the London Bridge terror attack victims on June 6. A new search was underway Tuesday in a neighborhood near the home of two of the London Bridge attackers, hours after police said they had freed everyone detained in the wake of the rampage that left several dead and dozens wounded. (AP)

LONDON, June 6, (Agencies): As outrage grows over the revelation that at least one of the London attackers was a well-known Islamist, authorities admitted Tuesday that their hands were often tied in tackling even known threats.

The issue of counter-terrorism has rocked the campaign for Britain’s national election on Thursday and put Prime Minister Theresa May and the country’s security establishment on the defensive. Police said that after three deadly attacks in three months they could hardly keep tabs on 3,000 people on the terror watchlist and 20,000 who have been on the intelligence radar in the past. And this despite sweeping new surveillance laws, particularly for online communications.

Peter Neumann, professor of security studies at King’s College in London, said it was simply “not possible” for a Western democracy to keep a close eye on all potential suspects. “There is a huge capacity problem that is similar to other Western European countries,” he told AFP. “Monitoring one person 24 hours a day requires about 20 officers.” One of the London Bridge assailants, Khuram Shazad Butt, a 27-year-old Pakistan-born Briton, was known to the police and MI5 intelligence service. He even featured in a television documentary entitled “The Jihadis Next Door”.

The status of one of the other assailants, Youssef Zaghba, 22, as a potential militant was passed on to the British and Moroccan secret services, according to Italian media reports. But British police said he and the third attacker Rachid Redouane, were not known to police or MI5 and there was no prior evidence of an attack plot. The three of them carried out the terror attack in central London on Saturday which left seven people dead and dozens more injured. London police chief Cressida Dick said the recent string of attacks in Britain, which has claimed 34 lives since March, was “unprecedented in my working life” but risked becoming the new normal.

Threat
“We in this country have faced a terrorist threat throughout my life — it changed and morphed and we will change and adapt to what appears to be a new reality for us,” she told the BBC. She warned that while police had managed to foil five attacks in recent months, it was possible they were witnessing the start of a wave of copycat assaults by freshly emboldened homegrown radicals. “Undoubtedly when people see something which appears from their perverted point of view to be successful, some people will be inspired by that,” she said.

Neumann agreed with her pessimistic assessment, although he said that other European countries were even more likely to remain in the jihadists’ crosshairs. “It’s part of the ongoing wave of terror which started in 2014 and has affected all of Western Europe,” he said. “Over the long term, countries like France and Belgium will be more severely affected.” As the Islamic State group, which claimed the three British attacks, loses territory in Iraq and Syria, its focus is likely to shift to assaults on the West, said Otso Iho of Jane’s Terrorism and Insurgency Centre. “It is seeking to project its influence and maintain its relevance by inspiring, encouraging, and — though there does not appear to be evidence of this in the latest UK plots to date — directing attacks in Europe and elsewhere,” he told AFP.

Policing has become a flashpoint of the British political debate, with Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn on Monday calling on May to quit over the loss of 20,000 police jobs, mostly during her six years as interior minister under previous prime minister David Cameron. London Mayor Sadiq Khan, a Labour party member, said a future Conservative-led government would introduce further cuts.

“If the Metropolitan Police budget is being shrunk and reduced, they have got to prioritise and use their resources in a sensible way,” he told ITV television, advocating neighbourhood policing. One of the men believed to have carried out the deadly weekend attack in central London was a known radical Islamist who was filmed unfurling a black flag resembling the one used by the Islamic State group and raised the suspicion of a neighbor after allegedly trying to lure local youngsters to join his jihadist campaign.

Evidence
Khuram Shazad Butt, the 27-year-old Pakistan-born Briton, as one of the assailants, saying he was known to authorities, though they had no evidence he was planning an attack. They identified a second attacker who had not aroused suspicion prior to Saturday’s rampage that killed seven people. As details about Butt emerged, however, they prompted questions of whether he could have been stopped sooner. He had appeared in a documentary, “The Jihadis Next Door,” that aired on British television last year.

Neighbors identified Butt from the film’s footage Monday, pointing to a scene in which he is shown participating in a provocative prayer session at Regents Park, near London’s biggest mosque and helping to display a black flag covered in white Arabic lettering similar to the one used by the Islamic State group, which took responsibility for the attack.

Butt is also seen in the film sprawling on the lawn and nodding as he listens to a sermon in which the speaker tells those gathered: “This is not the real life, my dear brothers. This is a passing time for us.” Butt’s apparent zealotry led one neighbor, Erica Gasparri, to contact police about 18 months ago.

The 42-year-old mother of three was working at a local school when she noticed Butt, who was also known as Abu Mohamed, meeting with local children and trying to draw them into his radicalism. “It was wrong what he was doing,” Gasparri said. “He kept talking about the Islamic State. I got very angry.” Salaudeen Jailabdeen, who lived near Butt, said the alleged assailant had once been ejected from a local mosque for interrupting an imam.

Another neighbor, Michael Mimbo, said he saw the van used in the attack near his home on Saturday, but didn’t see who was behind the wheel. He said the vehicle was seen going the wrong way down a one-way street and was later seen speeding off, followed closely by a small red car. The second alleged attacker was identified by police as Rachid Redouane, who alternately used the surname Elkhdar, and claimed to be Moroccan and Libyan. He used two different birthdates that would make him either 25 or 30, authorities said.